I’m not sure I follow what you mean by transparency in this context. Do you mean being more transparent about what exactly we were looking for? In our case we asked for <100 words on “Why are you interested in this role?” and “Briefly, what is your experience with effective giving and/or effective altruism?” and we were just interested in seeing if applicants’ interest/experienced aligned with the skills, traits and experience we listed in the job descriptions.
I mean transparency in the sense of how the answers are assessed/evaluated. This basically gives candidates a little bit more guidance and structure.
An analogy that I like to use is rather silly, but it works: I might ask a candidate to describe to me how physically fit he are, and he tells me about how many weights he can lift and how fast you can run. But it turns out that I’m actually interested in flexibility and endurance rather than power and speed, and I’ll reject this candidate since he didn’t demonstrate flexibility or endurance. So it is true that he described physical fitness and that I’m assessing based on your physical fitness, but it’s also true that the information offered and what I wanted to assess were very different.
I don’t have any particularly strong views, and would be interested in what others think.
Broadly, I feel like I agree that more specificity/transparency is helpful, though I don’t feel convinced that it’s not also worth asking at some stage in the application an open-ended question like “Why are you interested in the role?”. Not sure I can explain/defend my intuitions here much right now but I would like to think more on it when I get around to writing some reflections on the Research Communicator hiring process.
I just want to say that I love seeing this kind of thing on the EA Forum, and it is so different from most other parts of the internet: I have a proposal or a suggestion, and it doesn’t quite mesh with what you think/feel. Neither of us have great justifications or clear data, and rather than ad hominems or posturing or some type of ‘battle,’ there is simply a bit of exchange and some reflection.
I really like that your response was reflective/pensive, rather than aggressive or defensive. Thanks for being one of the people that makes the internet ever-so-slightly better than it otherwise would be. ☺
I’m not sure I follow what you mean by transparency in this context. Do you mean being more transparent about what exactly we were looking for? In our case we asked for <100 words on “Why are you interested in this role?” and “Briefly, what is your experience with effective giving and/or effective altruism?” and we were just interested in seeing if applicants’ interest/experienced aligned with the skills, traits and experience we listed in the job descriptions.
I mean transparency in the sense of how the answers are assessed/evaluated. This basically gives candidates a little bit more guidance and structure.
An analogy that I like to use is rather silly, but it works: I might ask a candidate to describe to me how physically fit he are, and he tells me about how many weights he can lift and how fast you can run. But it turns out that I’m actually interested in flexibility and endurance rather than power and speed, and I’ll reject this candidate since he didn’t demonstrate flexibility or endurance. So it is true that he described physical fitness and that I’m assessing based on your physical fitness, but it’s also true that the information offered and what I wanted to assess were very different.
What do you think about Joseph’s thoughts on those types of questions here: https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/4towuFeBfbGn8hJGs/amber-dawn-s-shortform?commentId=2N7JqCYzyt7FHCti2
I don’t have any particularly strong views, and would be interested in what others think.
Broadly, I feel like I agree that more specificity/transparency is helpful, though I don’t feel convinced that it’s not also worth asking at some stage in the application an open-ended question like “Why are you interested in the role?”. Not sure I can explain/defend my intuitions here much right now but I would like to think more on it when I get around to writing some reflections on the Research Communicator hiring process.
I just want to say that I love seeing this kind of thing on the EA Forum, and it is so different from most other parts of the internet: I have a proposal or a suggestion, and it doesn’t quite mesh with what you think/feel. Neither of us have great justifications or clear data, and rather than ad hominems or posturing or some type of ‘battle,’ there is simply a bit of exchange and some reflection.
I really like that your response was reflective/pensive, rather than aggressive or defensive. Thanks for being one of the people that makes the internet ever-so-slightly better than it otherwise would be. ☺